Suspected al Qaeda militants attack Yemen army camp, 12 dead - military official
Residents said they also heard gunfire after two loud explosions.
ADEN, YEMEN:
Suspected al Qaeda militants launched a car-bomb and gun attack on an army camp in southeastern Yemen early on Monday, leaving at least 10 militants and two soldiers dead, a military official and
residents said.
The assault near the town of Baddah in oil-producing
Hadramout province came after a lull in attacks by the IS
militant group.
Attackers set off two car bombs outside the camp, the official said. Residents said they also heard gunfire after two loud explosions. "Our soldiers foiled the attack and managed to secure the camp and we are still pursuing those who have escaped in nearby farms," the official told Reuters by phone.
Pentagon confirms US blitz in Afghanistan killed key Qaeda leader
Al Qaeda took advantage of years of turmoil to build up one
of its most active branches in the impoverished Arabian
Peninsula country. It has been forced out of some areas in recent years by Yemen's army and allied Saudi-led coalition forces backing
President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi in Yemen's civil war.
But its militants have retreated to mountainous and desert
areas and launch regular attacks on Yemeni troops and government
facilities. The United States has launched two commando raids on al
Qaeda forces in Yemen this year and stepped up drone attacks.
Suspected al Qaeda militants launched a car-bomb and gun attack on an army camp in southeastern Yemen early on Monday, leaving at least 10 militants and two soldiers dead, a military official and
residents said.
The assault near the town of Baddah in oil-producing
Hadramout province came after a lull in attacks by the IS
militant group.
Attackers set off two car bombs outside the camp, the official said. Residents said they also heard gunfire after two loud explosions. "Our soldiers foiled the attack and managed to secure the camp and we are still pursuing those who have escaped in nearby farms," the official told Reuters by phone.
Pentagon confirms US blitz in Afghanistan killed key Qaeda leader
Al Qaeda took advantage of years of turmoil to build up one
of its most active branches in the impoverished Arabian
Peninsula country. It has been forced out of some areas in recent years by Yemen's army and allied Saudi-led coalition forces backing
President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi in Yemen's civil war.
But its militants have retreated to mountainous and desert
areas and launch regular attacks on Yemeni troops and government
facilities. The United States has launched two commando raids on al
Qaeda forces in Yemen this year and stepped up drone attacks.